12.16.2016

Last night I met friends for happy hour snacks at The Rossi and nibbled appetizers from Chef Heaggans. I loved the chickpeas! Yearning for more, I recall waaaay back in this blog a post I did on baked cannellini beans, not the same at all as Matt's treat but enough to keep me sated between visits (and there will be many more visits).

I'm reposting this recipe because the old post has a broken image link.

I used great northern beans, canned. The beans get drained and rinsed. Then tossed with a small bit of olive oil, salt and paprika then tossed in an oven at 325F convection for about an hour. They pop into crunch snacks that remind me of popcorn. I store them out on the counter uncovered so they won't loose their crispiness. Not sure if that's necessary. Try these!

Great northern canned beans drained, rinsed, spiced and placed on parchment in a baking pan.

10.25.2016

I don't have much to add to this. I learned of making chicharon from SaucissonMac. My pics simply validate the procedure and I encourage you to do the same the next time you snag pigskin from The Butcher and Grocer!! (click on any image to enlarge)

Pigskin

After boiling gently in salted water 1.5 hours and then chilled an hour. See skin is separated from fat.

Shaving fat from skin with a slicer. Daisy quite interested in the fat to be discarded.

Skin, scraped of fat, placed on a cooling rack over a tray ready to be baked.

9.08.2016

This is a great dough with only a few ingredients that's great for a flatbread that can be made in a few minutes out of the fridge. It uses 2% fat greek-style yogurt, I've been using Fage. It's a tight dough, not sticky, so it's easy to work with. It's also easy to push into a disc with just hands, I don't use a rolling pin. The method I use to cook them is stove top according to this post (or you can do them in the oven like in this post).

Mix by machine or by hand, let rise about a half hour at room temp and toss in fridge. Use up to 5 days later. To bake, remove from fridge, portion dough into 4 pieces, round them, squish into ca. 6" discs using flour to keep from sticking. Bake according to one of the methods linked above.

After a few minutes in the pan and a minute or so flipped, I toss it directly on the gas burner. The first side cooked in the pan goes toward the fire first. Most of the time, it puffs up.

Keep them on the burner until they get as charred or as light as you want. Kids tend to not like the char, adults, given their tendency to being crushed under the pressures of life, appreciate the dark ashen bits.

7.18.2016

About a year ago, I made the mistake and picked up Franklin's bbq book. It was then I realized any bbq I had done was shit. Franklin's bbq is from live fire and rapidly moving smoke rather than any configuration of smoldering wood in a closed system, the latter producing an acrid mess of a smoked meat product. I kind of knew that was an extreme position, but was stopped in my tracks.

Adding to this reluctance to ever visit bbq again was the duration of a typical smoking session, i.e., 12h for a pork butt, ca. 18h for a brisket, too much time for a busy life.

Having thought about this for literally a year, I decided to take a shot with the most convenient rig I could imagine and just taste, again, the results of my own labor to see how horrible it was. I rigged up an electric hotplate, nestled inside a kettle grill, not the best long term solution, but good for a single shot.

I placed a 1350 W hotplate, a Corning PC101 I picked up at a thrift store, inside the kettle on medium high, cooking oak in the tray.

Then I placed a stainless cylinder, a type of kettle extender I picked up long ago, on the bottom, and placed a chuck roast (poor man's brisket) rubbed w paprika, salt, pepper and brown sugar and let it rip about 250F for about 7 hours.

Electric heating was trivial, no effort at all.

Here's the final product. I pulled it off when it was a tad over 200F internal, wrapped it and tried some after an hour. Crazy heavy bark, nice smoke inside, but surprisingly, not acrid at all. Great smoke and not overpowering.

So, I'm not sure why I feared this option for so long, but suddenly I'm alive and in the bbq game again and the perfectionists can snub me.

My final problem is the electric thing. That hotplate is going to self destruct if left in that hot chamber for too long. So, I decided propane might be an option for me. I decided to modify a kettle and place it atop my turkey cooker for future use.

I trimmed out the bottom of a spare kettle I had on hand. Then ...

I placed it atop the turkey cooker.

So, there, my turkey cooker/propane smoker. Space in there for a cast iron pan holding the smoke wood, a rack for a drip tray and a big surface for meat and easy access to add more wood.

I decided to try some fish to give it a trial. I cured a piece of salmon and tilapia with 1:1 brown sugar:salt for an hour, rinsed/dried it and smoked it at 200F (oak) for an hour until it was about 150F internal. Killer!!

salmon, quick cured and smoked

tilapia, quick cured and smoked

So there, the propane rig can hold 250 internal easy using about 100 grams propane per hour, it'll be an easy 18 hour brisket cook. As far as the purists, I'm ready for bbq again, my crispy ends on the chuck roast were too good to live without.

5.18.2016

My leftover rice game has always been weak. My attempts at transforming cooked rice into a biryani inevitably turn into an overcooked rice dish. I should also say, I'm not entirely sure about the difference between biryani, pilau, fried rice, etc. So, my terms might be off.

So, I had some brown rice (rice cooker, basmati, about 3 cups) and wanted some veggies and beans with it. I simmered some mung dal in water (50 g beans in 180 g water) until tender but not falling apart. I rinsed the dal in cold water and kept it on the side. I also prepped: fine diced carrots, chopped button mushrooms, sliced green onions, made a puree of garlic/ginger/serrano, chopped cilantro.

Given my history with overcooked rice in dishes like this, I thought adding rice last might be best, here's how it went down: Turmeric, cumin, coriander, mustard and paprika were warmed in 2T ghee until the mustard seeds started popping. Then added serrano/ginger/garlic puree and let it cook a few minutes. Then sauteed carrots then shrooms, green onions, pre cooked mung dal, tamarind extract, cilantro and finally brown rice. After the rice addition, I only cooked it until the rice was warmed through.

Finally, a rice, veg, bean dish that wasn't mushy. I'll make this again for sure.

4.25.2016

Sometime back I tried making uthappam. From what I understand from co-workers, uthappam and dosa use the same batter but vary in thickness which is derived from the amount of water used to thin the batter.

The little pancakes were fun, but I wanted to see if there was any difference in taste if the utthapam had a different texture and took out the waffle iron, used the same formula for the batter:

basmati rice, 160 g
urad dal, 40 g
basmati and dal soaked in a total of 300 grams of water for about 8 hours.
pureed the mix in a wet grinder
added salt, 3 g
yeast, 1/4 t (I know, it's a cheat)

This mixture set for about 8 hours loosely covered in a bowl on the kitchen counter. Next morning it was nice and puffy. I took a scoop of batter and ladled it on to a well-preheated waffle iron and topped it with red onion, green onion and slivered serrano pepper. The top eventually crunched down on the mixture and voila! A utthapam waffle. We let them rest about 6 hours, warmed them up slightly and ate them with a raita.

Not sure if I'd make them again. I think I like the pancake version better. I did like how the toppings got cooked right in to the waffle. This would make them much easier to take along as a snack.

2.20.2016

There's nothing ground breaking here, but it is a reliable method for sublime wings.

A couple weeks ago I poached a 4 lb chicken with a bunch of veggies to make preparations for chicken and noodles. As I stripped the carcass of the meat, the skin fell off in large sheets. I couldn't resist, I needed to do something with it. I'm not a big fan of chicken skin, but decided to place it on parchment on baking sheet and bake it at 250F. Towards the end of the baking, I sat by the oven window and watched the darkened skin bake. There was a uniform bubbling across the surface as it cooked into a near potato chip crispness. Even at 250F, it was actually cooking like it was frying in oil. That chicken skin was so fatty and thick, it served is its own deep fryer!

Just out of the oven, crackly potato chip-like rendered chicken skin.

For kicks, I took some wings out of the freezer. I had a big bargain bag of wings and drummies. I took a few pieces out, dumped them in water about 15 minutes to thaw them, dried them off with paper towel and placed them on a fry pan, skin side up, with a sprinkle of coarse salt, pepper and squirt of Louisiana hot sauce and baked them at 250F for 2 full hours. Internal showed at least 180F after an hour but I let them go, wondering if the cloak of thick chicken skin would protect them from getting too dry. I finished off the wings with a 550F broiler for about 10 minutes (DO NOT LEAVE THEM UNATTENDED!).

2.01.2016

Since reading Franklin's barbecue book, my world view of low and slow has been completely demolished. Franklin is dismissive of any smoker set up that uses smoldering fuel, lump or otherwise. His view is bbq should be cooked from the indirect convective heat produced from a live flame, most often in a smoker with offset firebox. He doesn't think the heat and smoke emanating from smoldering wood is a good means to create good barbecue.

In one part of the book, he discusses a specific offset firebox. It's a cylinder where wood spans a lower arc of the circle leaving good airflow beneath. The fire produced in this way creates a perfect heat source for smoking.

Wouldn't you know, the wood in a kettle grill sits in exactly the same manner. And, with the vents and all, the airflow and movement is darn good in a kettle. So, despite Franklin's dissatisfaction with the kettle for 'q, it can be configured quite well for this ideal heat source.

Take my Firedome for instance. Setting a small oak fire in the kettle and affixing the Firedome lid enables the fire to stay lit, not smoldering. Because of all the air let in by the lidded door, the heat only gets to about 200 on the center of the grate. Pretty perfect environment to get a "clean" fire and good smoke from my oak to smoke these pieces of salt-cured salmon.

Given this ideal set up am I ready to take on the ultimate challenge, a brisket? NO! This type of set up is a pain to maintain. Replenishing wood every 30 minutes is too much work for an 18 hour brisket not to mention how much wood it would take! But, it does provide a good start. Now maybe a redesign of the dome for this purpose, fuel type, ventilation scheme, etc. Fun stuff to think about.

1.14.2016

Few things cause more anxiety about pizza making than shoving the floppy piece of dough off the peel and onto the hot cooking surface intact. Lately I've been using, and have been smitten with the Baking Steel. I use it in the lower third of my oven using 550F convection. This corresponds to a surface temp of about 570F, determined by infrared thermometer.

That's pretty hot. A pizza dough, topped, is pretty floppy. Takes a bit of practice to get the right amount of flour beneath it so the pie slides. Any toppings hit that surface and the smoke detectors are going off.

Parchment's a great crutch but it's only good to 425F. BUT, if it's trimmed close, the micro environment near the pizza crust should never exceed about 220F. I tried some 12" diameter pieces trimmed close to the pie but the bottom crust just wasn't as crisp as not using it. It must've encapsulated just enough moisture to prevent the crisping of the crust.

Which brings me to today. I tried the same 12" diameter parchment on a 260 g piece of dough. This time, I perforated it by folding it into 8ths and punched a bunch of holes in it.

I pushed the dough out almost all the way (should have had about 280 - 300 g to go the entire 12") but this was a good starting point. I dusted the dough lightly and tossed it on the paper.

Sliiiiides nicely on the peel without a ton of excess flour! Now I can relax, talk to guests and top this without worrying about the bottom sticking to the counter.

Topped lightly with tomatoes and parmesan, oil and some salt. I let it sit on the parchment about 12 minutes and it still floated around the peel nicely.

Baked at 550F convection for 4.5 minutes. The excess paper was definitely in danger of ignition, next time I'd trim closer or push the dough to cover the paper more completely.

Pulled the pie out and it slid off the paper with a few tugs. Note the paper in contact with the dough is perfectly fine, that section could even be used again.

Biggest result of the entire experiment - good color and crispy on the bottom!!

Total winner. I'll be experimenting with this a lot, especially when making a zillion pies for a dinner. Set up a bunch of shells on parchment, go hang with guests, top and bake. Crusts can sit out for a long time without drying out.